The platform builds a modular hydrogen mobility architecture. Core components — hydrogen fuel cells, battery buffers, electric drivetrains, and software control — integrate into a single, scalable chassis. One engineering base across three platform sizes: Patrol/City, Police/Ranger/Emergency, and Logistics/Industrial.
Four mission types run on the same platform: Government & Security (border patrol, military support, emergency response), Industrial & Logistics (ports, corridors, mining), Urban Infrastructure (smart city, airport, utility), and Disaster Response (all-terrain, independent fuel, extended off-grid range).
Four compounding revenue layers generate multi-stream value from a single infrastructure investment. Mission Vehicles (ASP $85K–$111K avg) anchor the asset layer. The Fuel Network ($12→30→50+ sovereign H₂ hubs along Saudi mission corridors) creates recurring infrastructure yield. Lifecycle Operations delivers long-term service contracts per vehicle per operator. Mission OS — Saudi-owned fleet dispatch and uptime monitoring — is exportable across the GCC.
Each hub that comes online increases the operational and economic value of every hub already running. The flywheel is structural, not promotional.